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Sen. John McCain awoke Wednesday with a commanding lead in the race for Republican delegates while former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney plans to meet with aides after a disappointing Super Tuesday showing.Currently, McCain has 604 delegates according to RCP to Romney's 244. McCain is likely to pick up 20-30 more delegates as soon as California and a couple of other proportional delegate states are completely counted.
"We are the Republican Party front-runner," said Sen. John McCain, "and I don't really mind it one bit." "Although I've never minded the role of the underdog and have relished as much as anyone come-from-behind wins, tonight I think we must get used to the idea that we are the Republican Party front-runner," McCain said Tuesday night in his home state of Arizona. "And I don't really mind it one bit."
Despite finishing second to McCain in terms of GOP delegates won in Super Tuesday contests, Romney assured supporters late Tuesday he would "keep on battling ... all the way to the convention." But top Romney advisers acknowledged that it will be difficult to overcome McCain's lead in the delegate count. "It is tough to saddle up this a.m.," one Romney adviser told CNN.
Romney, who did not have any public events scheduled for Wednesday, was planning to huddle with his aides to discuss a strategy to stay in the race through March 4, when Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont will hold primaries.